In China, Government Data on Drugs Blocked From Public After Backlash
Read more at The New York Times
Topics
-
Is DeepSeek really sending data to China? Let’s decode
DeepSeek-R1 can collect and store on servers located in China, but there's an easy way to circumvent this.VentureBeat - 1d -
China investigates generic drugs over safety concerns
Anaesthetics are not putting patients to sleep, doctors warn, in call for greater access to foreign medicineFinancial Times - 1d -
China Pushes Neighboring Countries to Rein In Scams After Rare Public Outcry
The abduction of a young Chinese actor, who was trafficked from Thailand to Myanmar, prompted an unusually powerful public-pressure campaign and official actions.The Wall Street Journal - 6d -
Provision of UK public services disrupted by government buildings ‘left to crumble’
Spending watchdog says maintenance backlog totals £49bn, dominated by schools, NHS and MoD propertiesFinancial Times - Jan. 22 -
Caitlin Clark forced to change public appearances after threats from alleged stalker
Michael Lewis, of Denton, Texas, to appear in court 55-year-old arrested over threatening messages A 55-year-old man has been arrested and charged with stalking and sending threatening messages ...The Guardian - Jan. 13 -
After $95 Million Settlement, Apple Says It Never Sold Data From Siri
The tech giant, which has a reputation for prizing user privacy, denied that its voice assistant app collected information and used it to create marketing profiles.Inc. - Jan. 9 -
Gloucester remove Russia flag from player’s shirt after backlash
Gloucester will remove the Russia flag from the back of Kirill Gotovtsev’s shirt for all matches moving forward and have issued an apology “for any offence this may have caused”.Yahoo Sports - Jan. 8
More from The New York Times
-
Kenichiro Yoshida Will Step Down as C.E.O. of Sony
Kenichiro Yoshida, who has led Sony since 2018, will be succeeded as C.E.O. by the company’s chief financial officer.The New York Times - 3h -
Starbucks Reports Weak Earnings as It Tries to Woo Back Customers
Traffic is down, but improving. “Much of our work is just beginning,” said Brian Niccol, the chief executive.The New York Times - 2h -
Tech Stock Sell-Off Eases After DeepSeek Scare
Investors around the world are reassessing the prospects for technology companies after a Chinese artificial intelligence start-up rocked markets in the United States on Monday.The New York Times - 8h -
Karoline Leavitt Invites Content Creators to the White House Press Briefing
President Trump’s press secretary invited social media influencers and content creators to sit with the traditional press corps.The New York Times - 7h -
Why DeepSeek Could Change What Silicon Valley Believe About A.I.
A new A.I. model, released by a scrappy Chinese upstart, has rocked Silicon Valley and upended several fundamental assumptions about A.I. progress.The New York Times - 19h
More in Business
-
With Panama Canal-U.S. tensions rising, 'all options on the table,' warns Trump's top maritime official
Trump's new top maritime official Louis Sola tells CNBC 'all options on the table' to punish Panama and defend U.S. business, trade and national security.CNBC - 31m -
The Fed Is About to Hit Pause on Rate Cuts. Here’s Why.
Faced with a solid economy and mounting inflation concerns, the U.S. central bank has said it will “move cautiously” on cutting interest rates.The New York Times - 36m -
UK ministers plan to subsidise EV loans to drive sales
State could underwrite private sector loans to reduce monthly repayments and purchase costsFinancial Times - 45m -
Duping is the sincerest form of flattery for Charlotte Tilbury
The British make-up artist behind the billion-dollar cosmetics brand must live with a wave of imitatorsFinancial Times - 45m -
DeepSeek-driven sell-off puts power demands of AI in doubt, says IEA
Breakthrough suggests artificial intelligence’s appetite for energy may not be as insatiable as previously thoughtFinancial Times - 45m